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Featured researches published by S. Larson.


Living Reviews in Relativity | 2013

Testing General Relativity with Low-Frequency, Space-Based Gravitational-Wave Detectors

Jonathan R. Gair; M. Vallisneri; S. Larson; John G. Baker

We review the tests of general relativity that will become possible with space-based gravitational-wave detectors operating in the ∼ 10−5 − 1 Hz low-frequency band. The fundamental aspects of gravitation that can be tested include the presence of additional gravitational fields other than the metric; the number and tensorial nature of gravitational-wave polarization states; the velocity of propagation of gravitational waves; the binding energy and gravitational-wave radiation of binaries, and therefore the time evolution of binary inspirals; the strength and shape of the waves emitted from binary mergers and ringdowns; the true nature of astrophysical black holes; and much more. The strength of this science alone calls for the swift implementation of a space-based detector; the remarkable richness of astrophysics, astronomy, and cosmology in the low-frequency gravitational-wave band make the case even stronger.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2017

Gravity Spy: Integrating Advanced LIGO Detector Characterization, Machine Learning, and Citizen Science

M. Zevin; S. B. Coughlin; Sara Bahaadini; Emre Besler; Neda Rohani; Sarah Allen; M Cabero; Kevin Crowston; Aggelos K. Katsaggelos; S. Larson; Tae Kyoung Lee; Chris Lintott; T B Littenberg; A. P. Lundgren; Carsten S. Østerlund; J. R. Smith; L. Trouille; V. Kalogera

With the first direct detection of gravitational waves, the advanced laser interferometer gravitational-wave observatory (LIGO) has initiated a new field of astronomy by providing an alternative means of sensing the universe. The extreme sensitivity required to make such detections is achieved through exquisite isolation of all sensitive components of LIGO from non-gravitational-wave disturbances. Nonetheless, LIGO is still susceptible to a variety of instrumental and environmental sources of noise that contaminate the data. Of particular concern are noise features known as glitches, which are transient and non-Gaussian in their nature, and occur at a high enough rate so that accidental coincidence between the two LIGO detectors is non-negligible. Glitches come in a wide range of time-frequency-amplitude morphologies, with new morphologies appearing as the detector evolves. Since they can obscure or mimic true gravitational-wave signals, a robust characterization of glitches is paramount in the effort to achieve the gravitational-wave detection rates that are predicted by the design sensitivity of LIGO. This proves a daunting task for members of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration alone due to the sheer amount of data. In this paper we describe an innovative project that combines crowdsourcing with machine learning to aid in the challenging task of categorizing all of the glitches recorded by the LIGO detectors. Through the Zooniverse platform, we engage and recruit volunteers from the public to categorize images of time-frequency representations of glitches into pre-identified morphological classes and to discover new classes that appear as the detectors evolve. In addition, machine learning algorithms are used to categorize images after being trained on human-classified examples of the morphological classes. Leveraging the strengths of both classification methods, we create a combined method with the aim of improving the efficiency and accuracy of each individual classifier. The resulting classification and characterization should help LIGO scientists to identify causes of glitches and subsequently eliminate them from the data or the detector entirely, thereby improving the rate and accuracy of gravitational-wave observations. We demonstrate these methods using a small subset of data from LIGOs first observing run.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

DISTINGUISHING BETWEEN FORMATION CHANNELS FOR BINARY BLACK HOLES WITH LISA

Katelyn Breivik; C. Rodriguez; S. Larson; V. Kalogera; Frederic A. Rasio

The recent detections of GW150914 and GW151226 imply an abundance of stellar-mass binary-black-hole mergers in the local universe. While ground-based gravitational-wave detectors are limited to observing the final moments before a binary merges, space-based detectors, such as the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), can observe binaries at lower orbital frequencies where such systems may still encode information about their formation histories. In particular, the orbital eccentricity and mass of binary black holes in the LISA frequency band can be used together to discriminate between binaries formed in isolation in galactic fields and those formed in dense stellar environments such as globular clusters. In this letter, we explore the orbital eccentricity and mass of binary-black-hole populations as they evolve through the LISA frequency band. Overall we find that there are two distinct populations discernible by LISA. We show that up to ~90% of binaries formed either dynamically or in isolation have eccentricities measurable by LISA. Finally, we note how measured eccentricities of low-mass binary black holes evolved in isolation could provide detailed constraints on the physics of black-hole natal kicks and common-envelope evolution.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

Characterizing Accreting Double White Dwarf Binaries with the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna and Gaia

Katelyn Breivik; Kyle Kremer; Michael Bueno; S. Larson; S. B. Coughlin; V. Kalogera

We demonstrate a method to fully characterize mass-transferring double white dwarf (DWD) systems with a helium-rich (He) WD donor based on the mass--radius relationship for He WDs. Using a simulated Galactic population of DWDs, we show that donor and accretor masses can be inferred for up to


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Accreting Double White Dwarf Binaries: Implications for LISA

Kyle Kremer; Katelyn Breivik; S. Larson; V. Kalogera

sim, 60


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2015

Ultra-compact binaries as gravitational wave sources

S. Shah; S. Larson; Warren R. Brown

systems observed by both Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) and Gaia. Half of these systems will have mass constraints


General Relativity and Gravitation | 2014

C7 multi-messenger astronomy of GW sources

M. Branchesi; G. Woan; P. Astone; I. Bartos; A. Colla; S. Covino; M. Drago; X. Fan; S. Frasca; Chad Hanna; Brynmor Haskell; J. S. Hazboun; I. S. Heng; Daniel E. Holz; Nathan K. Johnson-McDaniel; I. D. Jones; L. Keer; Sergey Klimenko; G. Kostas; S. Larson; Ilya Mandel; M. Mapelli; C. Messenger; G. Mazzolo; A. Melatos; Soumya Mohanty; V. Necula; M. E. Normandin; L. Obara; R. Opiela

Delta,M_{rm{D}}lesssim0.2M_{odot}


Physical Review Letters | 2018

LISA Sources in Milky Way Globular Clusters

Kyle Kremer; Sourav Chatterjee; Katelyn Breivik; C. Rodriguez; S. Larson; Frederic A. Rasio

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V. Kalogera

Northwestern University

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Kyle Kremer

Northwestern University

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C. Rodriguez

Northwestern University

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Emre Besler

Northwestern University

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